Corin Cates-Carney
Corin Cates-Carney is the Flathead Valley reporter for MTPR.
Corin has worked for NPR, and is a UM Journalism School Graduate.
-
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration has given emergency use authorization for monoclonal antibody treatment for mild-to-moderate COVID-19 cases in people who have tested positive for the virus and who are at high risk of having a severe case.
-
The Montana University System and University of Montana are rejecting allegations of gender discrimination and asking a U.S. District Court to toss out claims filed by one of the four female plaintiffs.
-
The federal Food and Drug Administration is recalling three lots of Parent’s Choice Rice Baby Cereal after a sample of the products tested above guidance for naturally occurring inorganic arsenic.
-
Under the deal, the tribes relinquished thousands of off-reservation water-rights claims in exchange for a nearly $2 billion trust to settle claims and improve the Flathead Irrigation Project.
-
Gov. Greg Gianforte is continuing to encourage Montanans to get a COVID-19 vaccine. He spoke during a press conference in Helena Tuesday amid a surge of the delta variant driving new cases in the state.
-
Montana’s senior U.S. senator is among a bipartisan group of 10 lawmakers working on an infrastructure deal after President Joe Biden ended talks with a...
-
A record number of Montanans are enrolled in the state’s expanded health coverage program for low-income adults. More than 9 percent of the state's population is enrolled in the program.
-
Trustees of the new Bitterroot Valley Community College district took their oath of office this week. They’re now preparing to build the state’s first...
-
The crisis of violence against Indigenous women and girls is being recognized in ceremonies in Montana and around the nation this week. Family members...
-
A year ago this week on the second Saturday of March in 2020, then-governor Steve Bullock held a press conference over a scratchy phone line to announce that four people in Montana had tested positive for COVID-19. A lot has changed since then.